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Andre Agassi’s Amazing Miami Open Sportsmanship Display

Andre Agassi’s Amazing Miami Open Sportsmanship Display


Andre Agassi has one of the most impressive legacies in tennis history. Not only did he won a career Grand Slam and an Olympic gold medal, but he was revered as one of the biggest personalities the sport has ever seen and transforming himself from a controversial teenager to elder statesman of the game.

As documented in my book “On This Day In Tennis History,” (for sale and download here https://a.co/d/42JAdn9 Agassi performed one of the classiest gestures ever in pro tennis that saved the final of the modern day Miami Open. Read the book excerpt below.

March 20, 1994 – In one of the sports best displays of sportsmanship, Andre Agassi agrees to delay the start of his Lipton Championships singles final against Pete Sampras after Sampras suffers from a stomach ailment, then loses to Sampras 5-7, 6-3, 6-3 in a hard fought final. The rules would have permitted Agassi to claim the match in a walk-over, but Agassi chooses not to be given the match – a decision that costs him $114,000 in prize money. Says Agassi, “If I can’t beat the best player in the world, I don’t deserve the trophy. And I certainly don’t deserve it if I can’t beat him when he’s sick.” Says Sampras of Agassi’s gesture, “He showed me a lot of class, and it’s something I’ll never forget,” Sampras wakes up feeling sick and blames a pasta dinner. He receives intravenous fluids for 90 minutes before taking the court on an empty stomach. “I’m as surprised as everyone in this room that I won,” Sampras says to the assembled media in the post-match press conference.





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